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�VVorking Fine Build a __ JULYj AUGUST 2004 Greene & Greene Side Table BY GAR Y ROGOWSKI Pi nned and pl ugged joi nts add beauty and strength S imple is beautiful, so they say. But I also know that simple and beautiful together are challenging to achieve. This became apparent when I set out to reproduce this Greene and Greene side table, which embodies the details and construction techniques practiced by the prolific furniture-making brothers Charles and Henry Greene in the early 20th century. The table base is assembled with pinned mortise-and-tenon joints; square ebony plugs decorate the pinned joinery; breadboard ends keep the tabletop flat; and the piece features a cloud-lift motif. Although the construction details are fairly simple, the challenge lay in translating the beauty of the table from photograph to the real thing. At first, I made a scale drawing from the photo, but the table looked oversize and chunky. To overcome my dilemma, I built a full-scale mock-up out of cardboard. This took only a few hours of slicing pieces of cardboard and assembling them with hot-melt glue. If a part seemed too big, I cut it down and rebuilt the model. For the tabletop, the aprons, and the stretchers, I chose a thickness of 1 appearance of the legs. When I was hap- py with the look of the cloud lift, I made a template for it out of '/!-in.-thick mediumdensity fiberboard (MDF) and then transferred the shape to my cardboard aprons. After I drew the breadboard ends on the cardboard top, the design felt and looked right. Now it was time to mill some wood. Cut mortise-and-tenons first The table is assembled with mortise-and-tenon joinery that is pinned and plugged. Thick legs provide ample room for the mortise-and-tenon joints from the aprons and stretchers without having them run into each other. All eight mortises for the aprons are the same size, and the tenons are haunched on top. The four mortises for the side stretchers also are the same size, but the tenons are not haunched. The first step is to mill the legs to final dimen- sion. Once the legs are complete, cut and fit the aprons and the side stretchers. These pieces 36 FIN E WOOD W 0 R KIN G Photos, except where noted: Mart Berger; lhis page: Michael Pekovich in., which matched the strong